Country: England Date of Birth: December 6, 1977 Place of Birth: Preston, Lancashire Batting Style: Right Handed Bowling Style: Right-Arm fast Skill: All Rounder Teams Played: Chennai Super Kings, England, ICC World XI
Batting Performance
M
Inn
No
Runs
HS
100s
50s
Avg
SR
Tests
79
130
9
3845
167
5
26
31.78
62.05
ODI
141
122
16
3394
123
3
18
32.02
88.82
T20s
7
7
1
76
31
0
0
12.67
126.67
IPL
3
3
1
62
24
0
0
31
116.98
Bowling & Fielding Performance
M
Overs
Runs
Mdns
Wkts
Avg
Best
Econ
Tests
79
2491.5
7410
507
226
32.79
5/58
2.97
ODI
141
937.2
4121
67
169
24.38
5/19
4.4
T20s
7
25
161
0
5
32.2
2/23
6.44
IPL
3
11
105
0
2
52.5
1/11
9.55
Career Performance
First Match
Last Match
Tests
July 23, 1998 v South Africa at Trent Bridge, Nottingham
August 20, 2009 v Australia at Kennington Oval (The Oval), London
ODIs
April 7, 1999 v Pakistan at Sharjah Cricket Association Stadium, Sharjah
April 3, 2009 v West Indies at Beausejour Stadium, Gros Islet - St Lucia
T20s
June 13, 2005 v Australia at The Rose Bowl, Southampton
September 19, 2007 v India at Kingsmead, Durban
IPL
April 18, 2009 v Mumbai Indians at Newlands, Cape Town
April 23, 2009 v Delhi Daredevils at Kingsmead, Durban
Profile
Andrew Flintoff is one of the few genuine all-rounders in world cricket today. Tagged as the next Ian Botham of England, Flintoff is an explosive right-handed batsman and a lethal fast bowler. He is the most intimidating cricketer in world cricket with his hard-hitting batting and intimidating bowling. The initial days in his international career were jolted by inconsistency and injuries. However, he established himself as a cricketer during the 2005 Ashes series where he was named Man of the Series for his all-round skills as England won back the coveted urn. The big Englishman is one of the fiercest strikers of the cricket ball and has the potential to turn the game on its head with his dominating style of batting. The well-built Lancashire all-rounder bowls at a lively pace and frustrates the opponent batsmen with his sharp bouncers and swinging yorkers. With his huge hands, Flintoff is also an excellent slip fielder. 'Freddie' was the skipper of the English side when they were whitewashed in the 2006-07 Ashes. However injuries soon got the better of the big man as he was forced to sit on the sidelines and enjoy the view rather than intimidate the opposition on the field. Since the 2005 Ashes, Flintoff has averaged 28.25 with the bat and 34.68 with the ball in 23 Tests out of the 48 games England played during this period. Both figures signify a dipping ebb when compared to his overall Test record of 31.69 and 32.51. To add insult to injury, he has not managed a century or five wickets in an innings in any series since then. He was purchased for a record sum of 1.5 million dollars at the auction of the second season of the Indian Premier League by the Chennai franchise. Injury again reared its ugly head and he was ruled out after only a handful of matches and less-than-par performances. He was subsequently ruled out of the World Twenty20 2009. Struggling to regain fitness for the Ashes, Flintoff then took a drastic step and announced that he would retire from Test cricket at the end of the 2009 Ashes. He did, however, mention that this move should make him more available for ODIs and Twenty20s, considering his vulnerability to injury. He emphasized his importance in the side by picking up 5 wickets in the second Ashes Test as England took a 1-0 series lead over Australia.